This is awesome! Until now nuclide (nuclide.io) was really the only way to do React Native work. VS Code is much faster and I vastly prefer it in almost every way to Atom. Can't wait to try this on my current React Native projects.
I think it is apples and oranges. From my experience, Atom is an editor with scripts, and IDE is a full blown code parsing and analysis engine. You can't "jump to declaration" as far as I know, in the same way in atom. Or do complex refactorings. IntelliJ tries to UNDERSTAND your code.
basically been struggling to run nuclide in an virtualbox ubuntu image on windows.
This basically brings the react native to windows!!!!!!
I always found it pretty pissy that nuclide didn't support windowds out of the gate and it was too much like Atom (insanely customizable but without the ability to ctrl+click on functions and variable declaration and high configurability with dependencies on 3rd party packages breaks Atom).
like the comment by jolux, I vastly prefer VS over Atom. In fact I might ditch Atom asides using it as a powerful Notepad.
man what is going on today? it's like a blitzkrieg by Microsoft.
Yesterday Microsoft was still uninteresting to me because I associated with being close source, not playing nice with other open source technologies....
I can confidently say that my view of Microsoft has changed dramatically after release of VS, React-Native, Xamarin, and now an AWS Lambda alternative that looks much better than AWS....here's hoping I can get some free credits from Azure to test out Azure....which equally I used to ignore but now...I'm taking a keen interest in Azure and what it has to offer over AWS...
It's really interesting to see Microsoft has made a huge effort in winning developer's hearts by opening up everything and it's working!
You should most definitely look at the docs for both before you decide. Unless something has changed, the Xamarin docs are pretty weak. They seem good until you do something beyond a simple todo list, then you are on your own, with few books/resources to draw from. React on the other hand has a much more active community and thorough docs.
I'm not saying Xamarin won't work for you, plenty of people seem to be productive in it. I personally have switched my focus to React and React-Native (coming from a c#/.net background).
Now I just wish MS would support React as a first class citizen in Visual Studio 2015/Community. It's great it's supported in Code, but lets get it supported across the entire VS family. That would rule.
Actually, you could already use ReactNative with Windows, but there were some quirks.
I just run the packager, with watchman and flow disabled, and it works pretty well. The VS Android emulator is free and so much faster than the default emulator - thats why i use Windows to create Android apps atleast.
Thanks for the note. I'll admit that when I was Greenfield on my current project the "we don't support Windows" stuff on the react native homepage was enough to ward me off.
The timeline was to strict for me to risk running into a massive "gotcha."
Ionic was a known entity and the "we will deliver successfully" choice as opposed to the "it will be so cool if this works" choice.
In my heart I definitely wanted to make the cool choice... But pragmatism won out.
> Microsoft is all about cross platform when they're loosing.
Isn't this being too harsh on them? Personally I think they're doing better than ever compared to the entire last decade of fuckup. Also MS has always been about cross platform (Maybe you disagree because you think MS is one of the platforms, but in reality the main reason MS succeeded originally was because they were cross platform--supporting all kinds of computers instead of trying to dominate full stack like Apple did)
I didn't get why this is news? We're building a react-native app with vscode on windows for a month now. (the team likes the combination very much, btw)
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 22.8 ms ] threadI'm still eagerly awaiting WYSIWYG/GUI tooling similar to MS Webforms or Structor. ( https://github.com/ipselon/structor )
Webstorm/IntelliJ is even slower than Atom
Some work is being done on that front:
https://pavelfatin.com/typing-with-pleasure
It's pretty snappy for me using the experimental setting referenced.
[1] https://www.decosoftware.com/
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11074653
Well, I knew that would be in there but I am surprised that they informed us about this at least.
https://news.ycombinator.com/reply?id=11398297&goto=threads%...
and now this arrives...
basically been struggling to run nuclide in an virtualbox ubuntu image on windows.
This basically brings the react native to windows!!!!!!
I always found it pretty pissy that nuclide didn't support windowds out of the gate and it was too much like Atom (insanely customizable but without the ability to ctrl+click on functions and variable declaration and high configurability with dependencies on 3rd party packages breaks Atom).
like the comment by jolux, I vastly prefer VS over Atom. In fact I might ditch Atom asides using it as a powerful Notepad.
man what is going on today? it's like a blitzkrieg by Microsoft.
Yesterday Microsoft was still uninteresting to me because I associated with being close source, not playing nice with other open source technologies....
I can confidently say that my view of Microsoft has changed dramatically after release of VS, React-Native, Xamarin, and now an AWS Lambda alternative that looks much better than AWS....here's hoping I can get some free credits from Azure to test out Azure....which equally I used to ignore but now...I'm taking a keen interest in Azure and what it has to offer over AWS...
It's really interesting to see Microsoft has made a huge effort in winning developer's hearts by opening up everything and it's working!
I'm not saying Xamarin won't work for you, plenty of people seem to be productive in it. I personally have switched my focus to React and React-Native (coming from a c#/.net background).
Now I just wish MS would support React as a first class citizen in Visual Studio 2015/Community. It's great it's supported in Code, but lets get it supported across the entire VS family. That would rule.
With Ubuntu space native on Windows you actually CAN develop a react native app on Windows now.
I just run the packager, with watchman and flow disabled, and it works pretty well. The VS Android emulator is free and so much faster than the default emulator - thats why i use Windows to create Android apps atleast.
The timeline was to strict for me to risk running into a massive "gotcha."
Ionic was a known entity and the "we will deliver successfully" choice as opposed to the "it will be so cool if this works" choice.
In my heart I definitely wanted to make the cool choice... But pragmatism won out.
Isn't this being too harsh on them? Personally I think they're doing better than ever compared to the entire last decade of fuckup. Also MS has always been about cross platform (Maybe you disagree because you think MS is one of the platforms, but in reality the main reason MS succeeded originally was because they were cross platform--supporting all kinds of computers instead of trying to dominate full stack like Apple did)
If I come across as anti-Microsoft, it's more that I think the US needs better anti-Monopoly laws. That's something we're still screwing up.
You are right - this was announced at ReactConf 2016